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Hidden Camera at NATO Rail Hub Sparks German Spy Probe
(MENAFN) German prosecutors have opened a formal espionage investigation after a concealed surveillance camera was uncovered at a critical western rail junction handling military shipments bound for Ukraine — a discovery that authorities believe may have been a precursor to sabotage.
Public broadcasters reported Tuesday that a Lithuanian national has been identified as the prime suspect in the installation of the covert device at Minden train station — a strategically vital loading point for German and British forces and a linchpin in NATO's eastern flank logistics network. Investigators raided the suspect's residence in Detmold Tuesday morning, the prosecutor's office confirmed.
The camera itself was a sophisticated piece of surveillance hardware. Mounted approximately five meters up a pole and disguised with a counterfeit DB sticker, the compact black device was equipped with a solar panel, a foreign SIM card enabling live feeds, night vision capability, and onboard recording storage — all trained on a shunting yard used to route military trains. It was discovered in September entirely by chance, when a DB — German rail company — employee spotted it, the broadcasters reported.
Authorities believe the device was deployed to systematically monitor Ukraine-linked military rail movements, potentially feeding intelligence to those planning a direct strike on the supply corridor. Investigators suspect Russian intelligence services may be behind the operation, though no evidence definitively establishing who commissioned the installation has yet emerged.
The case fits a pattern that Germany's domestic intelligence agency has flagged with growing alarm — that Moscow is no longer relying solely on trained operatives, but is increasingly recruiting civilians and would-be saboteurs with no formal intelligence background to carry out reconnaissance and disruption on European soil.
Public broadcasters reported Tuesday that a Lithuanian national has been identified as the prime suspect in the installation of the covert device at Minden train station — a strategically vital loading point for German and British forces and a linchpin in NATO's eastern flank logistics network. Investigators raided the suspect's residence in Detmold Tuesday morning, the prosecutor's office confirmed.
The camera itself was a sophisticated piece of surveillance hardware. Mounted approximately five meters up a pole and disguised with a counterfeit DB sticker, the compact black device was equipped with a solar panel, a foreign SIM card enabling live feeds, night vision capability, and onboard recording storage — all trained on a shunting yard used to route military trains. It was discovered in September entirely by chance, when a DB — German rail company — employee spotted it, the broadcasters reported.
Authorities believe the device was deployed to systematically monitor Ukraine-linked military rail movements, potentially feeding intelligence to those planning a direct strike on the supply corridor. Investigators suspect Russian intelligence services may be behind the operation, though no evidence definitively establishing who commissioned the installation has yet emerged.
The case fits a pattern that Germany's domestic intelligence agency has flagged with growing alarm — that Moscow is no longer relying solely on trained operatives, but is increasingly recruiting civilians and would-be saboteurs with no formal intelligence background to carry out reconnaissance and disruption on European soil.
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